Global Times

German verdict due in worst anti- Semitic rampage since WWII

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A German court is to hand down its verdict Monday on a deadly far- right attack in Halle in 2019 that nearly became the country’s worst anti- Semitic atrocity since World War II.

A bolted door at the eastern city’s synagogue with 52 worshipper­s inside marking Yad Vashem, the holiest day of the Jewish year, was the only thing that prevented a heavily armed assailant from carrying out a planned bloodbath, prosecutor­s say.

After failing to storm the temple on October 9, 2019, the attacker shot dead a female passer- by and a man at a kebab shop instead.

During his five- month trial, far- right defendant Stephan Balliet, 28, has denied the Holocaust in open court – a crime in Germany – and expressed no remorse to those targeted, many of whom are co- plaintiffs in the case.

“The attack on the synagogue in Halle was one of the most repulsive antiSemiti­c acts since World War II,” prosecutor Kai Lohse told the court in the nearby eastern city of Magdeburg as the trial wrapped up.

The prosecutio­n has demanded life in prison for Balliet. His defense team has asked presiding judge Ursula Mertens only for a “fair sentence.”

Lohse said Balliet had acted on the basis of a “racist, xenophobic and antiSemiti­c ideology” to carry out an attack against not only those he killed but “Jewish life in Germany as a whole.”

The events that unfolded were like a “nightmare,” he added.

“At the end of this nightmare, the perpetrato­r murdered two people and injured and traumatize­d numerous others.”

During the trial, Balliet insisted that “attacking the synagogue was not a mistake, they are my enemies.”

Dressed in military garb, he filmed the attack and broadcast it on the internet, prefacing it with a manifesto espousing his misogynist, neo- fascist ideology.

The attack bore some of the hallmarks of two carried out and similarly live- streamed some months earlier in Christchur­ch, New Zealand by Brenton Tarrant, who killed 51 people. Balliet cited Tarrant as an inspiratio­n.

He has been charged with two counts of murder and multiple counts of attempted murder in a case that has deeply rattled the country and fuelled fears about rising right- wing extremism and anti- Jewish violence, 75 years after the end of the Nazi era.

“The attack on the synagogue in Halle was one of the most repulsive anti- Semitic acts since World War II.”

Kai Lohse Prosecutor

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